Maroon by Kwame Onwuachi

Sahara Las Vegas

A Caribbean Steakhouse

Arriving Late 2025
 
Acclaimed culinary visionary and James Beard Award-winning Chef Kwame Onwuachi’s take on Caribbean cuisine is reverent and bold, with authentic flavors that come to life in imaginative new ways. For Chef Kwame, cooking is a form of storytelling. Maroon brings the history of jerk and Jamaican cooking to a new audience and pushes the Las Vegas steakhouse into a new realm.
 
In an excerpt from his book, My America: Recipes from a Young Black Chef, Onwuachi describes the significance of the name Maroon:
 

“In the 17th century, when the British overtook the Spanish as the colonial occupiers of Jamaica, the Spaniards set free many of their African slaves. Rather than submit to the British, these men, women, and children took to the Blue Mountains and became known as MAROONS. There they lived a hardscrabble existence, eking out a life from subsistence farming and occasional raids on the British occupiers. Fortunately for them, Jamaican pepper, what we call allspice or pimento, as well as Thai bird chili, wild thyme, and a bunch of other herbs, grew wild, as did a breed of wild hog first brought over by the ancestors of the Taino people from South America. Jerk was born, and it lives still two hundred years later, in the stalls that line Boston Beach in Jamaica, and in the shops of Flatbush and the North Bronx in New York and Croydon, Lambeth, and Brixton in London, and wherever else the Jamaican diaspora has reached.”

 
FROM CHEF “Bringing Maroon, a Caribbean Steakhouse, to SAHARA Las Vegas is an incredible opportunity for me to honor my Jamaican heritage, provide exciting fl avors, and tell my story to an entirely new audience,” said Chef Kwame Onwuachi. “Expanding my restaurant portfolio outside of the east coast is a huge milestone in my career, and I’m thankful to be welcomed into such a dynamic culinary community, located right in the heart of Vegas. It’s beyond overdue to have more Afro-Caribbean restaurants on the Strip, and I’m grateful for the platform because this will mean so much to so many.”
 
The SAHARA Las Vegas flagship restaurant will mark the first foray into the West Coast culinary scene for Chef Kwame, best known for his award-winning restaurant Tatiana in New York City and Dōgon in Washington, D.C. Rooted in Caribbean influences and fine dining technique, Maroon will be a celebration of heritage, innovation and flavor in a thoughtfully designed space. Set within SAHARA Las Vegas, known for its rich history, legendary hospitality and independent spirit, Maroon perfectly aligns with Chef Kwame’s forward-thinking vision and creative energy.
 
Over the past decade, Onwuachi has broken significant ground as a culinary catalyst and cultural changemaker. He was honored as one of TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of 2025, highlighting his impact and role in bringing diverse narratives to the forefront of American cuisine. Additionally, Chef Kwame acted as the culinary lead of the 2025 Met Gala, curating a menu infused with Caribbean flavors to complement the gala’s theme celebrating Black culture and style. Onwuachi is also the subject of Netflix’s Chef’s Table season 7, which tells how he defied the odds to ascend to the top of New York City’s food scene.
 
Other accolades include Tatiana being named The New York Times’ No. 1 restaurant in New York City in 2023 and 2024 and Dōgon earning Esquire’s Best New Restaurant in America last year, as well as honors in the Condé Nast Traveler’s 2025 Hot List. These accomplishments underscore Onwuachi’s continued influence and innovation in the culinary scene as he brings his contemporary dining experience to SAHARA Las Vegas later this year.
 
 

Learn More About Chef Kwame

Kwame Onwuachi is a James Beard Award-winning chef, and author of the critically acclaimed cookbook “My America” and memoir “Notes from a Young Black Chef,” which is being turned into a feature film by A24. Kwame has been named one of Food & Wine’s Best New Chefs, Esquire Magazine’s 2019 Chef of the Year, and is a 30 Under 30 honoree by both Zagat and Forbes. He’s also been featured on Time’s 100 Next List and has been named the most important Chef in America by the San Francisco Chronicle. Kwame appeared as a judge on season 18 of Top Chef in April 2021. He first appeared as a contestant on the show in season 13. He also was the host of the 2021 and 2022 James Beard Awards in Chicago. Kwame currently serves as Food & Wine’s executive producer. In this newly appointed role, Kwame will collaborate on big brand moments and events, including the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen, as well as the creator of “The Family Reunion: Presented by Kwame Onwuachi,” an annual multi-day event taking place in Middleburg, Virginia that celebrates diversity in the hospitality community. His restaurant concept Tatiana, opened at the Lincoln Center in November 2022. Since its opening, it has had numerous top accolades, including “The #1 Restaurant in New York City,” by the New York Times, “The One to Watch” by World’s 50 Best Restaurants, and La Liste’s “World’s Best Restaurants List.” In the Fall of 2024, he partnered with the Salamander DC hotel to open his newest restaurant concept, Dōgon.

(March 2025) Partnership with James Beard Award-Winning Chef Kwame Onwuachi

New Restaurant Slated to be Onwuachi’s First West Coast Concept

LAS VEGAS (March 2025) – An extraordinary new era in SAHARA Las Vegas’ culinary journey will begin in late 2025 with the opening of an original restaurant by James Beard Award-winning Chef Kwame Onwuachi. Renowned for revolutionizing the East Coast dining scene with New York’s Tatiana and Washington, D.C.’s Dōgon, Onwuachi is thrilled to debut a new concept at SAHARA, which will mark his first restaurant on the West Coast.

The partnership with Onwuachi aligns with SAHARA Las Vegas’ ongoing transformation, as the resort continues to blend its storied legacy with all-new experiences. It will showcase Onwuachi’s signature culinary artistry and also embrace the vibrant energy and spectacle of Las Vegas in a way only SAHARA can deliver.

“We have closely followed Chef Onwuachi’s career and deeply admire the significant impact he has had in New York City and Washington, D.C., where he has redefined the dining scene with his acclaimed cuisine,” said Paul Hobson, general manager of SAHARA Las Vegas. “At SAHARA, he will connect with a whole new audience, and we are honored to welcome him.”

“I am excited for this next chapter, and the opportunity to bring a new culinary concept to SAHARA Las Vegas and the city’s dynamic food scene,” added Onwuachi.

Additional details about Onwuachi’s SAHARA Las Vegas restaurant will be unveiled in coming months, and it will occupy the current Bazaar Meat by José Andrés space, which closes June 30, 2025.

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MEDIA CONTACTS
Carma Connected
[email protected]